The Syrmian Front saw some of the most difficult fighting in
Yugoslavia in World War II. It lasted for almost six months. As the bulk of the Red Army involved in the Belgrade operation continued their
offensive in Hungary, the Yugoslav Army, accustomed to
guerrilla warfare in the mountainous terrain of the
Dinaric Alps, remained to fight the
entrenched front line heavily contested by the Axis on the flat ground of the
Pannonian plain. Young men from
Vojvodina and
Central Serbia, many from freshly liberated regions, were drafted
en masse and sent to the front, and the amount of training they received and their casualty levels remain in dispute. Although mostly stationary, the front moved several times, generally westward, as the Axis forces were pushed back. The fighting started east of
Ruma and stabilized in January 1945 west of
Šid after the town changed hands due to Axis counterattacks. In late March and early April 1945, Yugoslav Army units mounted a
general offensive on all fronts. The
Yugoslav First Army, commanded by
Peko Dapčević, broke through German
XXXIV Corps defenses in Syrmia on 12 April, quickly capturing the cities of
Vukovar,
Vinkovci, and
Županja, and enabling further advances through
Slavonia toward
Slavonski Brod and
Zagreb in the last month of the war. The campaign can be divided into four distinct phases: • The first phase lasted from 24 October to the end of December 1944, and was characterized by slow but steady advancement of Yugoslav and Soviet forces through the seven German fortified lines of defense through fierce battles and heavy losses on both sides. • In the second phase, from 3 to 26 January 1945, the Germans performed a successful counterattack with the newly arrived forces of
XXXIV Corps of Army Group E, and succeeded in winning back to the Nibelung Line, the main line of defense in Syrmia, while inflicting heavy losses to the Yugoslav Army. • The third phase was a stalemate period from 26 January to 12 April 1945. In this period both sides only performed limited reconnaissance activities. • The fourth phase began when Yugoslav forces broke through the German defense lines on 12 April, with heavy German losses and fierce battles and Army Group E retreating. ==References==